- Difference in pronunciation between: a, á, ã, â and à
European Portuguese Sep 11, 2014 #5 Á and À are an open A (like in start), while  is a closed A (like
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Others: French to Spanish Spanish to French English base Spanish base German base Portuguese base French base Currently, only used for the language combinations above We encourage comments, thoughts and suggestions about the suggested changes to the dictionaries, especially if you can confirm that suggested changes are correct
- Brazilian portuguese- opa - WordReference Forums
Brazilian portuguese- opa Thread starter killerbee256; Start date Dec 11, 2013; K killerbee256
- Portuguese Happy Birthday lyrics - WordReference Forums
This should have been posted in the Portuguese-English section Here it is: Parabéns a você, Nesta data querida Muitas felicidades, Muitos anos de vida Hoje é dia de festa, Cantam as nossas almas Para o a menino a _____, Uma salva de palmas I think there's more, but people usually just sing these two stanzas
- Hindi: loanwords from Portuguese, French, Dutch and Danish
Perhaps in Goa, the Portuguese colony (where Portuguese is still spoken, but diminishing in presence), there would be more The Portuguese brought us a lot of plants and fruits - often from South America, such as the ananas and I think the avocado
- Azorean Portuguese vs. other Portugueses? - WordReference Forums
I think most Portuguese people like Azorean accents There was a time when accents from outside Lisbon or Coimbra were deprecated, and you may still find one or two jerks, but nowadays the attitude towards accents is generally positive You can listen to various accents of Portuguese at the website of the Instituto Camões
- Pronunciation of o, ó and ô - WordReference Forums
It has not become "naturalized" in my spoken Portuguese (although in written Portuguese, it's quite simple ) In the city I live in, Fortaleza, there is an even more complicated situation with a single spelling (but different accents) that results in three pronunciations and meanings, one of which is quite rude
- Portuguese and German- linked? - WordReference Forums
Even Welsh, Russian, Hindi Urdu and Farsi (Persian) are linked with both German and Portuguese, but apart from the common European core of vocabulary with words like Reaktion (Ger ) and reacçao (Port ) - for reaction - and the fact that the structure of the two languages is closer than either one to the totally alien Arabic or Chinese, it is extremely difficult for a German or a Portuguese
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